Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Dec. 25, 1908, edition 1 / Page 4
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XMAS GOODS -AT- ], B, PICKELSIMER, PL G, Druggist and Pharmacist MAIN STREET PHONE 85 Everything best in Drags. For Christmas Christmas Post Cards, Booklets and Cards, Christmas Novelties in Silver, Leather and Hand-Painted Wood* Sylvan Valley News Subscription Price of the News For three months - 35c For six months 65c For one year $1.25 PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY j. J. MINER. Owner ana Manaerer. A. B. RILiEY. Associate Editor. 08IE M. MINER. Bookkeeper and Collector. FORMS CLOSE—Thursday Noon Friday Morning^ Dec. 1908. SOWING WILD OATS. Stamped and Finished Goods. Silk and Cotton Embroidery rioss MISS M. WAVE LONG, ART PARLORS. r^TTr?: inr<iW. TUB. i £ 3 nor 4 5 6 7 .8 9 10 11 IS 13 14 15 16 17 18 18 20 21 22 S3 m m 26 27 28 29 30 31 LOOK AT YOUR LABEL. Barlied Wire $2.25 per We were able to get a small loc of Barbed Wire so that wc can sell it at $2.25 per roll. At this price it should not las) a week, so come at once if you expect to build a fence soon* We are informed by drummers that the price of wire will be higher next year than thist When this is gone we cannot get any more at this price* Ttiis is Cash Only. T>orCt order, C, BOYLE, BREVARD, N. C. PLUMBING Gas and Steam Fitting Sewer Building, Tin and Sheet* Iron Work, etc. Cook Stoves, Ranges, Tin and Enameled Ware, Builders’ Hard ware, Sewer Pipe, Plumbers Sup plies, Galvanized Guttering and Spouting kept in stock. Screen Wire, Gasoline, Machine Oil, etc. W. E. BISHOP Your Magazine Subscriptions W H 0 GETS YOUR ORDER If you want your magazines QUICK and at right prices, Fm the man. Dealing direct with the publishers, as an agent, I guarantee perfect satisfaction. Magazine Clubs my specialty. It’s foolish to pay two prices when you can often get two or three magazines for the price of one. I have a special offer on your list. Better let me quote you prices before ordering elsewhere. I always meet and otten beat the club offers of all reliable agencies, none excepted. Give me your order at their prices. Full information regarding all magazines, special offers, etc., cheerfully given. If interested, kindly let me know. My references; Hundreds of satisfied customers in this city. Make no mis take, and give all your subscriptions to JOS. M. KERN, Tlie Magazine Man, Brevard, N. C. If the address on your copy of the News shows the figures 11 09 your subscription ends with this issue, and your name will be dropped from the list unless we hear from j^ou. If you wish to take advantage of our $1 offer you must renew before Jan. 1. As a further inducement for immediate action we will give an extra subscription to any club raiser w’ho sends us §^10—or they may take their commission of 10 per cent in cash for 10 yearly subscribers. If you haven't time to come to town to attend this matter, w^e are striving to reach all sections of the county with agencies at the various country stores. If you live in the lower end of the county you can subsc4:ibe with aqy of the following merchants: W. L. Tall3^ Penrose Jas. Clark, Enoii J. 0. Deaver, Pisgah Forest. * ONLY A PHOTO. Normal Department of Brevard Institute. MISS SARAH RUTHERFORD (Kirkville Normal), Director. Miss Rutherford is a cultured and unusually successful Primary Teacher and ^ociation with her in the school room is exceedingly valuable to any young teacher The following work is required for the Normal diploma: 1. Nine years of ordinary graded school work. 2. A study of the Principles of Education, School Organization and DiscioHne 4.' PsTchlloty for Teaching Elementary Branches.’ 5. Two years’ Practice Teaching, supervised by Director 0. Reviews preparatory to the Teachers’ Examinations. Graduates are prepared for choice positions in graded schools. The course will C. H. TROWBRIDGE, Brevard, N. C. For descrspti(m of Music Department, see last week’s News For Business Department, see next week’s News A picture which may interest some of our readers was received at the News oftice last Friday, and is near enough the holidays to be accepted as a Christmas souvenir. During the editor’s outing last September he visited the home of his venerable father in com pany with two brothers, and the trio prevailed on their paternal ancestor to go and sit with them for a photo. This involved a ride of seven miles in an open surry, and for a man v,’ho has passed the ninety-tifih milepost in life’s journey, looked like a big under taking. The picture which resulted from that sitting represents 300 years of life—r.n average of 75 years each. Fathei; is past 95, the oldest “boy” is s'eyeral moons past three score and ten, the writer is half a year more than 68, and the youngest of the group passed his 65th birthday in Au gust last. While we prize the picture very highly it should have included another son, the youngest boy, who is in business in Chicago and was too busy to make the group complete. To those of our friends in Bre vard who have familiarly desig nated us as “old man Miner” we would submit the photo for their inspection, and hope that they may be induced to respect the venerable j^ears of our aged pa rent and elder brother. All who feel interested are in vited to call at the News office and see this ph-Dto of the “Miner boys.*’ Marked For I>eatli. “Three years ago I was marked for death. A gnive-yard coiigh was tearing|my lungs to pieces. Doctors failed to help me, and hope had fled, when niy husband got Dr. King's New Discovery,” says Mrs. a/c. Williams, of Bae, Ky. “The first dose helped me and improvement kept on until I had gained 58 pounds in weight and my health was fully restored,” This medicine holds the world’s healing record for coughs and colds and lung and throat dis eases. It prevents pneumonia. Sold under guarantee at T. B. Allison’s drug store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Away back somewhere in the history of our ancestry it became “fashionable” to palliate the mis chievous pranks of larger boys and grown young men with the qyasi excuse that they were ‘:sowing their wild oats. ” So long as these pranks are harmless and law abiding very little excuse is needed, but when the}’^ result in injury to others’ property, or give pain to man or animal they become crimes, and the sowers may reap a harvest which tliey are not expecting. Within the past few* days the remark has been made in our hearing that a boy “must sow his wild oats.” If this remark is true he “must” comply with the s made by older men while sowing his crop. If he sows in lawlessness and injury to others, he must reap retribution and pun ishment for himself. These remarks are made in all kindness and in the hope of pre venting some worse manifesta tion than Brevard has yet had of a spirit of “hoodlumism” which has recently developed among our young men. Brevard has heretofore had sufficient experi ence with this same spirit to be fully alive to the evils which go with it, and it is safe to say our people wuli never again permit it to overshadow law and order, nor will they long submit to the wrongs which an indiscriminate sowing of wild oats is liable to lead up to. In many instances these mani- stations develop in a crowd of boys whose breath is stariied i h llio poisoned fumes of whib'kv or cigarettes, or both, and we would warn them that there is no open door to business success for boys who indulge in either. Every advertisement for help in the want columns of city papers contains the w^arning— ‘•no booze or cigarette fiend need apply.” “When whisky is in, wit is out,” is an old and true saying, -nnd the mind of a cigar ette user will certainly go into disuse and decay. Boys in Bre vard have several object lessons in men who have paid out hun dreds of dollars to rid themselves of the appetite for stimulants v;hich these boys are novv culti vating, and which, unless they call a halt, will haunt them to their graves. Boys, the Nevvs is your friend. Its editor has “been through the mill” and knows whereof he speaks. You should remember that you must soon take the places of those now in charge, and the best jobs will always go to those whose characters aie above reproach. Your present actions are giving the tow’n a bad name, and you should have soma care for the town if you have none for yourselves. Our schools are worthy and are making Bre vard popular as an educationa center, and any interference with their various functions, es pecially when your breath smells of liquor, is unworthy of any boy raised in Transylvania county. Why not drop your worse than useless habits and come up higher? The lime will come, if it is not already here, when you will not be excused by the plea of “sowing wild oats.” A I>aiigerous Operatioii is the removal of the appendix by a surgeon. No one who takes Dr. King’s New Life Pills is ev^er sub jected to this frightful ordeal. Tliey work so quietly you don’t feel them. They cure constipation, headache, billiousness and malaria. 25c. at T. B. Allison’s drug store. We wonder if Mr. Taft as Pres ident will be able to call the turn on vice, business immorality and general bad citizenship in so many and varied terms as has his honored predecessor. \ou know as well as any one when you need something lo regulate j^oiir sj’stem. If your bow’els are sluggish, your food distresses j ou, your kid neys,pain, take Horistor’s Rocky Mountain Tea. It al yays relieves 35 cents Tea or Tab.’ets.-AIlison’s Drug Store. Jtppreciation We appreciate the confidence irh^ posed in this bank by our customers during the past year. We desire to show our appreciation by giving to you the best service possible at all times. We wish you a prosperous 1909 and hope to merit a continuance of your patronage. We shall be pleased to serve you. Brevard \ Banking Co. For Autumn and Winter We are now ready with a large and well selected' stock of Dependable Merchandise at moderate and proper prices. ONE PRICE TO ALL. All Goods Marked in Plain Figures. Strictly on raei’i^, with no inducement save the excellence of the goods and the attractiveness of the prices, we snb- mit our fall merchandise for your inspection and approval. Fine Dre^s Goods, Fancy Goods, Notions, Ladies’Tailor- made Suits, Skirts, Waists, Coats, Shoes, Hosiery, etc. Fine Clothing, Furnishing Goods and Shoes for Men and Boys. H. REDWOOD & CO. ASHEVILLE, N. C. - iriSTXJLA. POSITIVELY NO MONEY Until you are perfectly well is the guarantee which any o£ these prominent men will tell you is as good as a gold bond* Washington Candy Man Cured of Piles and Fistula—Never Felt Better in His Life Than at Present. Washington, D. C., Jan. IG, ’07, Drs. Thoi'nton & Minor: Dear Doctors—Print, and say to the world if you wish.—No man on earth suffered more -^han I did with Piles and Fistula before coming to see you, and now after four years and twelve hundred miles away I am glad to tell you I never felt better in my life, never weighed more and never have had any of those troubles since you cured me. Yours respectfullv, H. H. CASSIDY, 1007 G ^t., S. W., Manufacturer of Candies.-- Telephone Main 36:0. Suffered From Fistula—No Symp toms of a Return of the Dis ease After 18 Years. Washington, D. C., April 22, 1904. Drs. Thornton <& Minor: Gentlemen—1 had suffered about three years with Fistula, when friends who had been successfully treated by you advised me to go to you for treatment. I am happy to state that your treatment of my case was success ful and in every wajj satisfactory, and now, after a lapse of eighteen years, there have been no symptoms of a re- tui'n of the disease. I shall be grate ful to the friends who advised me to go to you for treatment, and can con scientiously recommend your method as a safe, scientific and satisfactory one. Very truly your friend, W. N. IPvWIN, U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. Suffered with Piles and Contrac tion for Twenty Years. Staley, N. C., April IG, 1907. Drs. Hiornton Minor: Gentlemen—I suffered with piles and contraction for about twenty jears, and during that time tried al most every remedy that was recom mended, but the piles gradually srrew worse. The fall of 1C05 I went to your ofiice in St. Louis, Mo., for treatment, and in taree weeks I. left for home a well man. One cannot make a mis- take in placing their case in the hands of Drs. Thornton Minor, as they' are gentlemen of the highest type and i physicians of the greatest honestv and skill, and will guarantee a cure or no pay, and you don’t have to pay till you are cured. j. w. COX General Merchant. Hi's Mind Affected by Sufferings from Piles, Fistula and Fis- ' sure—Restored to Health. Jefferson, S. C., Jan. 28, 1905. Drs. Thornton & Minor: Gentlemen—I am alwaj^s willing to help any one in the fix I was with Piles, Fistula and Fissure. I can say to all who might be in the same fix, go right to their office and be cured, for I had that troublesome disease for about twenty years. I got so that I could not do my own work and it seemed that my mind was affected at times. Vv^hen I would a^o to stool the blood would come out in a stream about the size of a knitting needle. I lost so much blood that sometimes I would |almost as soon have been dead as liv- i'jg. I saw an advertisement in the .Commercial Appeal, which is printed in Memphis, Tenn. I wrote to them and they answered me at once and I corresponded with them about a year before I went. The only thing I "hcnte is that I did not go sooner. They wrote me that they had a branch office in St. Louis, Mo., and could cure me there as well as in Kansas City, Mo. I'Wrote them that I would start on the 19th of September and for them to meet me at St. Louis, Mo. So 1 start ed on the 19th of September and I ar rived at St. Louis, Mo., on the 22d of September. About an hour after I got there Dr. Minor met me and the doc tors exatnined me and told me that my case was a serious one, but they could cure me. I have had more pain in one action of the bowels before I went there, than I had from iheir treatment. 1 took treatment for a lit tle over three weeks and they said I could go home. I was walking: about all the time I was being' treated. I c.ii just anything I wa’^ted. I could rot ask anybody to be more kind to me than they were while I was with them. When I came home I weighed one hundred and forty pounds; when writ ing this testimonial I weighed one hundred and sixty-one pounds, and am twenty-five j^ears I did when I left home Yours respectfully. G. H. COOK/ General Merchandise. I take pleasure in endorsing" all that others say regarding the Thorn ton & Minor treatment. After 15 vears of suffering: from piles and ul ceration I feel that four weeks at their sanitarium has cured me.. Enquiries will be cheerfully answered. J. J. MINEPv, Editor Sylvan Valley News^ feel like I younger than to be treated. Address all Communications to The Thornton & Minor Sanitarium _ ^ M- »•. Physician fa charge OFFICES: 1004 OAK STREET Kansas City, Mo.
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 25, 1908, edition 1
4
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